1 / 30

Evaluation of EHDI Follow-Up Protocols in Washington State

Evaluation of EHDI Follow-Up Protocols in Washington State. National EHDI Conference March 3-4, 2005 Dalrymple, Beattie, Masse. Outline. Background Information Protocol Analysis Conclusions. State of Washington. 75,000 births/year 68 Birthing Hospitals 18 Pediatric Audiology Clinics

evania
Download Presentation

Evaluation of EHDI Follow-Up Protocols in Washington State

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluation of EHDI Follow-Up Protocols in Washington State National EHDI Conference March 3-4, 2005 Dalrymple, Beattie, Masse

  2. Outline • Background Information • Protocol Analysis • Conclusions

  3. State of Washington • 75,000 births/year • 68 Birthing Hospitals • 18 Pediatric Audiology Clinics • Screening is Voluntary

  4. EHDI in Washington State • Developed Tracking and Surveillance System • Currently covers 65% of births from 43 hospitals • Follow infants from newborn screen through diagnostic evaluation -- Monitor that each infant is screened -- Recommend appropriate follow-up care -- Evaluate outcomes

  5. Data Collection • Hospital Birth Rosters • Blood Spot Cards • Hearing Screening Cards • Audiology Diagnostic Information

  6. Follow-Up Protocols • System generates multiple follow-up protocols • Timed to achieve 1-3-6 Goals • Protocol actions consist of: • Letter • Fax (if no response from letter) • Phone Call (if no response from fax) • Close Case (after response from any of the above) • Contact is made through primary care provider • Outcome code given at closing of case

  7. Outcome Codes

  8. Protocol Analysis

  9. Purpose of Analysis • Assess time-line efficiency • Evaluate outcomes • Determine workload

  10. Data • Live Births from January 1, 2004 through September 30, 2004 (Q1 through Q3) • Total Number of Live Births: 10,856 • Data collected from 23 WA hospitals

  11. Common Follow-Up Protocols (1) Infant was missed (2) Infant did not pass initial hearing screen (3) Infant did not pass rescreen (4) Infant passed but has risk factors

  12. Protocol 1: Infant was missed • Causes • Received a blank hearing screening card • Missed infant found via program monitoring • Protocol Actions • Letter (0 days) • Fax (28 days if no response to letter) • Call (49 days if no response to fax) • Close Case (60 days or after response)

  13. Protocol 1: Infant was missed • 498 protocols initiated

  14. Protocol 1: Infant was missed • Observations • Known outcomes for most infants • Not all outcomes indicate success • Higher number of pending cases • Protocol timing is appropriate • Workload generated is high (1/3)

  15. Protocol 1: Infant was missed • Next Steps….. • Find ways to reduce missed infants • Identify “true” misses

  16. Protocol 2: Infant did not pass initial screen • Causes • Patient did not pass initial screen • Protocol Actions • Letter (21 days) • Fax (49 days if no response to letter) • Call (70 days if no prior response) • Close Case (81 days or after response)

  17. Protocol 2: Infant did not pass initial screen • 661 protocols initiated

  18. Protocol 2: Infant did not pass initial screen • Observations • Known outcomes for most infants • Not all outcomes indicate success • Protocol timing is not appropriate • Workload generated is high (1/2)

  19. Protocol 2: Infant did not pass initial screen • Next Steps…. • Adjust protocol timing to reduce workload • Continued provider support

  20. Protocol 3: Infant did not pass rescreen • Causes • Infant did not pass rescreen • Protocol Actions • Letter (0 days) • Fax (28 days if no response to letter) • Call (49 days if no response to fax) • Close Case (60 days if no response to prior actions)

  21. Protocol 3: Infant did not pass rescreen • 114 protocols initiated

  22. Protocol 3: Infant did not pass rescreen • Observations • Known outcomes for most infants • Not all outcomes indicate success • Protocol timing isappropriate • Workload generated is low

  23. Protocol 3: Infant did not pass rescreen • Next Steps…. • Better diagnostic reporting • Continued provider support

  24. Protocol 4: Infant passed but has risk factors • Causes • Risk factors reported on hearing screening card • Protocol Actions • Letter (0 days) • Fax (28 days if no response to letter) • Call (49 days if no prior response) • Close Case (60 days or after response)

  25. Protocol 4: Infant passed but has risk factors • 120 protocols initiated

  26. Protocol 4: Infant passed but has risk factors • Observations • Known outcomes for most infants • Different standard for “success” • Protocol timing is not appropriate • Workload generated is low • Accuracy of reporting is unknown

  27. Protocol 4: Infant passed but has risk factors • Next Steps…. • Increase accuracy of reporting • Further evaluation of risk factors as indicators • Adjust protocol timing

  28. Summary • Known outcomes for most infants • Not all outcomes indicate success • Timing should be evaluated • Workload should be consider

  29. Conclusions • Protocols need to be flexible • Protocols need to be evaluated • Workload needs to be manageable • Don’t lose focus of the goal

  30. Contact Information WA DOH EHDDI Program Nancy Dalrymple, MPH Catie Beattie, MS Rich Masse, MPH E-mail: ehddi2@doh.wa.gov Website: www.doh.wa.gov/ehddi

More Related